We are going to try to keep all the hardwood timber that has to come down. It won't be a lot, but some of it like the cherry is pretty desirable. We'll have no shortage of maple also.
I can't believe I didn't take a photo of our mountains of wood chips. So many wood chips. My advice: If you look at property with wood chips all over the friggin' place, first bring a shovel and dig test pits to estimate the depth, and second, if the depth is more than a few inches, either require the seller to remove them or get a price reduction equal to removal. Our excavator may be able to work out a trade for gravel, but in the end, I think we are going to pay for hauling. I should have listened to the Frankenstein voice in my head that kept saying "wood chips bad."
That's our excavator (green shirt) Ken Krapf overseeing test pit digging done by his son, Ken Jr., to see what's underneath now that 80% of the wood chips are up. Note the pile of rocks. Basically everything 2" under the surface is rock, but fortunately the stone has a vertically structure and is quite friable. Most of the stone in the valley is calcareous (a lot of limestone and marble.) That stone is what all our walls are made from and what kept coming up in the bucket whenever Ken Jr. pulled the lever. But all that stone keeps the valley alkaline - when healthy, a ph of 7.28 - even though the rainwater that seeps down from the Taconics to our east that is acidic (down to a ph of 4.0!) So the rock is a bit of a PITA, but it is also what keeps everything in the valley happy and healthy.
IMG_4993II.jpg
Moss loves calcareous rock, which is why the walls on our property are so fuzzy with all sorts of moss species. So it was kind of cool when we visited the Rheinstrom Hill Audubon Preserve on the outskirts of Hillsdale and saw how the use of calcareous rock for the paths through the Preserve had resulted in a nice mossy surface. Good idea since we'll probably have a pile of stone next to the pile of wood chips when we're done.
And the maples have already started to change over. This October, I plan to be up on the property quite a bit, removing Eurasian Bitterroot vine from several sections of the property. So with the leaves changing, that won't be too much of a hardship.
Bookmarks